A simple urine test can reveal whether you had steamed fish or a fat-riddled steak for dinner and could one day end dietary dishonesty, according to a study published last Friday.

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UNITED KINGDOM - A simple urine test can reveal whether you had steamed fish or a fat-riddled steak for dinner and could one day end dietary dishonesty, according to a study published last Friday.

The test may also boost the health of people suffering from diabetes, obesity or heart disease, the study said.

Monitoring calories is notoriously difficult outside a clinical setting because people are often reluctant to admit what they have - or have not - eaten.

Still under development, the five-minute lab test identifies biological markers in urine that are specific to different food groups, researchers reported in The Lancet Diabetes and Endocrinology.

For now, the pee probe can distinguish between red meat, fish and chicken, and provides a good indication of fat, sugar, fibre and protein intake as well.

"We are not at the stage yet where the test can tell us a person ate 15 chips yesterday and two sausages," said co-author John Mathers, a professor at the Human Nutrition Research Centre at Newcastle University in England.

"But it is on its way."

Photo: Pixabay

In trials, some 60 per cent of people under-report their intake of food they know to be unhealthy and over-report consumption of fruit and vegetable, research has shown.

"A major weakness in all nutrition and diet studies is that we have no true measure of what people eat," said senior author Gary Frost, a professor at the Department of Medicine at Imperial College London.

Being dishonest about what you eat not only hampers scientists studying nutrition but also doctors treating diseases aggravated by poor diet.

Excess sugar, fat and salt intake, for example, is implicated in a host of conditions, from heart attacks and strokes, to high blood pressure and diabetes. Doctors can only help patients design healthier diets if they know what they are actually eating.

To develop the test, researchers at three universities asked 19 volunteers to keep to four different diets ranging from super healthy to artery-clogging.

Meals at the other end of the spectrum had whole wheat cereal, low-fat milk, steamed fish and boiled vegetables.

The scientists established chemical profiles for each diet, and developed an "instant indicator" of whether someone is eating healthy or not.

They then analysed urine samples from 300 people who took part in an earlier study in which food intake was carefully monitored and found that the new test accurately reflected what they had eaten.

"For the first time, this research offers an objective way of assessing the overall healthiness of people's diets without all the hassles, biases and errors of recording what we've eaten," Prof Mathers said.

The next step, he said, is to test a larger group of people.

The researchers hope to make the test commercially available within two years.